Gold hits most overbought level in 45 years as ETF demand spikes
Gold has reached its most overbought technical reading in nearly five decades, driven by a historic surge in exchange-traded fund inflows that underscores intensifying investor demand for the precious metal. The relative strength index on monthly gold charts climbed to 89.72 this week—the highest level since 1980—signaling a market stretched far beyond typical overbought thresholds and raising questions about the sustainability of the rally.
Extreme Technical Levels Signal Caution
Technical analysts track the RSI as a momentum indicator, with readings above 70 typically suggesting an asset is overbought. Gold’s reading near 90 represents an exceptional extreme, driven by a year-to-date surge of 43% that has been both relentless and sustained across monthly timeframes.
This type of extended reading historically precedes corrective moves. Market participants are already monitoring for potential short-term pullbacks, though current price action shows no signs of immediate reversal.
Gold’s RSI approaching 90 on the monthly chart represents the type of extreme reading that doesn’t emerge often. When it does, consolidation typically follows.
— Market Technicians
Gold’s monthly RSI of 89.72 marks the highest overbought reading since 1980, well above the 70 threshold that typically signals stretched valuations.
ETF Inflows Reach Two-Year Highs
Behind the technical extremes lies a concrete force: institutional and retail capital flooding into gold investment vehicles. On Friday alone, gold-backed ETFs recorded inflows of 27 tonnes, the largest single-day addition since January 2022 and more than double the year’s daily average.
The one-day increase triggered a 0.9% jump in total ETF holdings—the biggest percentage gain in over two years. These holdings have expanded in nearly every month of 2025 except May, accumulating approximately 400 tonnes of net inflows for the year.
Silver has caught secondary momentum, with the largest silver ETF recording options volume that spiked to 1.2 million shares on Friday—the highest since April 2024. Silver briefly touched $44 per ounce during the week, while spot gold stabilized around $3,760 per ounce.
Gold ETF inflows have now produced six consecutive weekly gains, the longest winning streak since February. Bloomberg data shows 400 tonnes added year-to-date, excluding May.
Platinum and palladium have lagged this precious metals rally, indicating that gold and silver are driving the sector rotation.
Industry Structure and Market Concentration
The gold ETF industry has undergone significant consolidation over the past decade, with three major providers—iShares, Invesco, and Sprott—controlling approximately 75% of global assets under management in physically-backed gold funds. This concentration means that large inflows to these vehicles can move spot prices materially, particularly in lower-liquidity trading sessions.
The structure of modern gold ETFs differs substantially from physical bullion markets. ETFs provide fractional ownership, lower transaction costs, and tax-advantaged holding structures in certain jurisdictions. These features have democratized gold investment, enabling retail participants to accumulate positions that previously required significant capital commitments. The proliferation of options trading on ETF shares—evidenced by silver ETF options volume reaching 1.2 million shares Friday—has introduced derivative leverage that amplifies both inflows and potential outflows.
Mining companies have responded to the sustained gold rally by increasing exploration budgets and accelerating development projects. Major producers including Newmont, Barrick Gold, and Agnico Eagle have all raised full-year production guidance, expecting to meet surging demand. However, permitting delays and labor constraints continue to limit near-term supply growth, potentially extending the fundamental supply deficit that has supported prices.
Macroeconomic Backdrop Fuels Safe-Haven Demand
The Federal Reserve’s recent 25 basis point rate cut has compressed real yields—the return on bonds adjusted for inflation—pushing investors toward non-yielding assets like gold that benefit when real returns turn negative. Persistent inflation, expanding fiscal deficits, and geopolitical tensions across Europe and the Middle East have all reinforced gold’s traditional safe-haven appeal.
Real yields, measured by the yield on Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities minus nominal Treasury rates, have fallen to their lowest levels since 2020, making gold’s zero-yield characteristic less of a relative disadvantage. When investors perceive limited return opportunities from fixed-income securities, the appeal of tangible stores of value intensifies. This dynamic has been particularly pronounced among institutional asset allocators, who view gold as essential portfolio insurance against currency debasement and inflation surprises.
Central banks remain aggressive accumulators. Their sustained demand for gold reserves has provided structural support beneath prices throughout the rally, preventing sharp corrections despite the extreme technical readings. The International Monetary Fund reported that central banks added 1,037 tonnes of gold to reserves in 2024, the highest annual total in over 50 years. This institutional demand operates independently of technical conditions, creating a floor beneath speculative sell-offs.
Central banks have been acquiring gold at a pace that suggests they view the metal as essential to reserve diversification and long-term wealth preservation.
— Reserve Banking Officials
Market speculation has intensified around the possibility of gold reaching $5,000 per ounce by year-end. Traders are closely watching this week’s personal consumption expenditures price index, the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation gauge, for signals about the timing and magnitude of potential future rate cuts. A soft inflation reading could accelerate rate-cut expectations and compress real yields further, potentially propelling gold toward levels that seemed distant only months ago.
President Donald Trump’s recent comments at a United Nations General Assembly meeting in New York have injected fresh uncertainty into global markets. Trump stated that NATO countries should intercept Russian aircraft that breach their airspace and expressed confidence that Ukraine can prevail in its ongoing conflict.
These statements occur against a backdrop of already-elevated tensions in Eastern Europe and the Middle East. Such geopolitical friction typically increases the premium investors assign to safe-haven assets, providing fundamental support for gold prices independent of technical or monetary policy considerations. Historical analysis shows that periods of heightened geopolitical risk correlate with increased gold allocations, particularly among institutional investors managing multi-asset portfolios.
The combination of rate-cut expectations, inflation concerns, and geopolitical risk has created multiple layers of support for precious metals. Whether this foundation is sufficient to sustain prices at current extremes—or whether technical mean reversion occurs—remains the critical question for traders and portfolio managers.
Market Implications and Forward Outlook
The current environment presents a paradox: gold exhibits extreme technical conditions typically associated with impending corrections, yet fundamental demand metrics suggest further upside may be constrained only by valuation limits rather than supply or demand factors. ETF inflows represent marginal investment demand—capital moving from other asset classes into gold—while central bank accumulation represents structural, non-price-sensitive demand.
If the Federal Reserve proceeds with additional rate cuts in 2025, real yields could approach zero or turn negative across multiple maturities, potentially providing a pathway for gold to sustain elevated price levels. Conversely, if inflation proves more persistent than current market expectations, real yields could stabilize or increase, triggering the technical correction that RSI extremes typically precede.
Gold’s technical extremes and record ETF inflows represent a market at an inflection point. The pullback that typically follows such overbought readings may be measured and brief, or it could represent a more meaningful consolidation phase. The interplay between technical positioning and fundamental demand will determine whether current price levels prove sustainable or mark a temporary peak. Investors should monitor coming economic data, Federal Reserve communications, and geopolitical developments closely for signals about which scenario may unfold.
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